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  • FNU Alumni Named to Duke-Johnson & Johnson Fellows Program

    FNU Alumni Named to Duke-Johnson & Johnson Fellows Program

    FNU Alumni selected as Duke-Johnson & Johnson Fellows

    The Duke-Johnson & Johnson Nurse Leadership Program has selected four Frontier Nursing University (FNU) graduates as Advanced Practice Nurse Fellows for the 2018-19 program year.

    This one-year fellowship is a leadership development program through the Duke University School of Medicine Division of Community Health.

    The program provides leadership development opportunities for advanced practice nurses to be better able to meet the challenges of the evolving health care environment. After completion of the one-year fellowship, program fellows are enabled to provide more effective and efficient health care services to underserved populations.

    FNU alumni selected as fellows for the 2018-2019 program include:

    Julie Paul, DNP, CNM, FACNM. Paul graduated from FNU’s CNEP (Class 42) and DNP (class 4). She’s now a student in the PMHNP program class 155 and co-director of a certified nurse-midwife hospitalist program at South Shore Hospital in Weymouth, Mass.

    Laura Willis, DNP, APRN, FNP-C, CMSRN. Willis completed both her CNFP (Class 88) and DNP (class 16) at FNU. She now practices at Urbana Family Medicine and Pediatrics through Mercy Health Physicians Group in Urbana, Ohio.

    Tamara Rolan, CNM, APRN, MSN. Rolan is a graduate of CNEP (Class 85) at FNU, practicing midwifery at St Luke’s OB-GYN Clinic in Meridian, Md.

    Nikia Grayson, CNM, FNP, APRN. Grayson graduated from FNU’s CNEP (Class 142). She now serves underserved, underrepresented women as a nurse-midwife at a private reproductive health clinic in urban Memphis, Tenn.

    A total of 45 advanced practice nurses were chosen as 2018-2019 fellows.

    Congratulations to our FNU Alumni selected for this honor!

  • FNU Hosts “Call the Midwife” Screening Event for Season 7 Premiere

    FNU Hosts “Call the Midwife” Screening Event for Season 7 Premiere

    FNU hosts screening of "Call the Midwife" Season 7

    For the sixth consecutive year, Frontier Nursing University hosted free a reception and screening event of the hit PBS show, “Call the Midwife,” Season 7 on March 22, 2018.

    The PBS drama “Call the Midwife” follows the nurses, midwives and nuns from Nonnatus House, who visit the expectant mothers of the deprived Poplar district of London’s desperately poor East End, providing the poorest women with the best possible care. Season 7 premiered on PBS on March 15, 2018.

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) has been involved with the show since the program’s inception, with a rich history during the early days of midwifery. FNU faculty member Katie Moriarty, PhD, CNM, CAFCI, FACNM, RN is one of four experienced midwives who partner with PBS and Detroit Public Television to discuss their role in modern obstetrics in relation to “Call the Midwife,” which takes place in the 1950s and 1960s. As a “Modern Day Midwives Blogger” for the show’s website, Moriarty contributes valuable knowledge of midwifery as it relates to FNU in regular blog posts.

    The Season 7 screening event, held at the Kentucky Educational Television (KET) Studio in Lexington, Ky., included a reception with complimentary hors d’oeuvres and beverages leading up to the screening. Several dozen “Call the Midwife” fans, FNU supporters, and friends from the community enjoyed getting together and chatting about the most exciting season yet!

    To see photos from the screening, click here.

    To learn more about the hit PBS and BBC drama series, “Call the Midwife,” go here.

    About Frontier Nursing University:

    FNU is passionate about educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to serve women and families in all communities, especially rural and underserved areas. FNU offers graduate Nurse-Midwifery and Nurse-Practitioner distance education programs that can be pursued full- or part-time with the student’s home community serving as the classroom.  Degrees and options offered include Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP), Master of Science in Nursing (MSN) or Post-Graduate Certificates. To learn more about FNU and the programs and degrees offered, please visit Frontier.edu.

  • FNU Grad Delivers Her Own Baby – Story Goes Viral

    FNU Grad Delivers Her Own Baby – Story Goes Viral

    Emily Dial delivers her own child. Photo provided by Emily Dial.
    Photo provided by Emily Dial.

    A heartwarming story picked up by the New York Post, Fox News, MSN and Yahoo, among others, features a Frontier Nursing University (FNU) midwifery alumnus delivering her own child via cesarean section.

    On March 11, 2018, Emily Dial, CNM, who graduated from FNU’s women’s health care nurse practitioner program in 2010 and the nurse-midwife program in 2011, scrubbed in for surgery as she was being prepared for her third child’s C-section delivery. This is a process Dial has done over 700 times in her eight years of advanced practice midwifery – though every other time, she was getting ready to assist in another mother’s birth.

    After the abdominal incision was made, two obstetricians guided Emily’s hands to the baby. She pulled the child from her own abdomen and searched to learn its gender for the first time – a healthy baby girl!

    “The excitement in that room from everyone involved was palpable,” Dial said. “Not a dry eye in the room.”

    Dial chose to be involved in her own delivery because she wanted to experience birth as an active participant and not simply as a spectator. In the births of her first two children, she played more hands-off roles. Even more than the intimacy that clear drapes and skin to skin time provide in birth experiences for mothers, with this delivery Dial wanted to participate in the ultimate birth experience by guiding  her own baby out, if the conditions were right.

    Dial had known from the time she was a young girl that she was called to midwifery. She chose to continue her midwifery education after her graduation from FNU because the institution is founded on values that center around the family, with empowering women and supporting the laboring mother at its heart.

    “Mary Breckinridge had a vision and the more I dove into FNU’s history, the more I knew it was the place I could grow my midwifery roots,” Dial said.

    Her goal through a career as a certified nurse-midwife is to follow moms in their motherhood journeys and ultimately be their primary labor and delivery support person. For Dial, midwifery encompasses care for women through the lifespan. Being present during that pivotal moment in their lives is her driving force.

    “FNU prepared me for that moment,” Dial said. “The support of a mom during this important moment in her life is one of the best services a midwife can offer.”

    Dial’s amazing birth story was reported on by national news conglomerates and local affiliates, as well as family/motherhood media outlets like LoveWhatMatters and CafeMom. The photos her photographer posted on Facebook have garnered 1.5k likes and been shared nearly 1,000 times.

    Though she never ever imagined her birth story would go viral, Dial is using this platform to share an important message: “I hope it offers moms a chance to embrace whatever their experience may be.” Whether C-section or vaginal delivery, Dial says, “Live satisfyingly in that moment!”

    And for midwives: “Support women, always. Don’t just stand back and watch. Be WITH WOMEN.”

    To see the full news article, go here.

  • VIDM Features FNU President as Keynote Speaker

    VIDM Features FNU President as Keynote Speaker

    FNU presents at VIDM 2018

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) has been educating students in the field of nurse-midwifery for nearly 80 years. FNU president and certified nurse-midwife Susan Stone will have the opportunity to share FNU’s vision and present on the topic of nurse-midwifery this May as a keynote speaker for the 2018 Virtual International Day of the Midwife.

    In its tenth year, the Virtual International Day of the Midwife (VIDM) is an annual online conference which celebrates the International Day of the Midwife held each year on May 5th. The free virtual event, sponsored in part by FNU, uses online conferencing software to bring together anyone who has an interest in childbirth matters – from midwives to professionals, and students to consumers.

    This year, the VIDM conference begins on May 4, 2018 at 5 p.m. EDT and features a 24-hour program covering a wide range of subjects with speakers from around the globe. Dr. Susan Stone is featured as one of five keynote speakers, joining esteemed midwifery and nursing professionals from across international borders in the Netherlands, Ghana, Australia and New Zealand.

    Dr. Stone’s presentation covers the importance of building a diverse midwifery workforce. Using her three decades’ worth of experience in the field, Dr. Stone will talk about how a diverse workforce in the midwifery field in the United States will improve maternity care outcomes. Her session can be seen for free at 8:00am EDT in Room 2 of the virtual Big Blue Button conference space.

    This year’s other VIDM speakers, representing 15 countries, 6 continents, and 3 languages, cover a wide range of subjects. Just a few of the topics are:

    • Neonatal safety with water birth: Results from our meta-analysis
    • Designing, developing and testing ‘Home But Not Alone’ mobile phone app for new parents in the early postpartum period
    • Birth outcomes of women with BMIs >30 enrolled for care at freestanding birth centers
    • Postnatal Pilates: Findings from a pilot study

    This year, two other FNU faculty and staff members are actively participating in the VIDM as well. Jane Houston, DNP, CNM, Clinical Program Director at FNU is serving as a member of this year’s VIDM committee and member of the VIDM marketing staff. Stephanie Boyd, FNU’s Multimedia Communications Specialist, will facilitate a speaking session on Saturday from 9-10:00am EDT.

    VIDM is a fantastic teaching opportunity for our FNU faculty and staff, but also a great learning opportunity to hear from some of the brightest minds in midwifery. Students, faculty and the public can tune in for free to the 2018 VIDM on www.vidm.org.

  • Congratulations to Our 2018 Winter Term Circle of Caring Award Winners!

    Congratulations to Our 2018 Winter Term Circle of Caring Award Winners!

    Circling of Caring 2018 Winter Term Winners

    Frontier Nursing University (FNU) is pleased to announce Patricia Caudle as the faculty recipient and Katie Moses as the staff recipient of the 2018 Winter Term Circle of Caring Award.

    This award is a recognition for Frontier faculty and staff who go above and beyond everyday duties and strive to uphold FNU’s mission and Culture of Caring.

    Nominations for this award were submitted anonymously by faculty, staff and students. A committee then voted on each nomination based on the following Culture of Caring characteristics: professionalism, mutual support, respect, positive communication and inclusivity.

    Patricia Caudle, DNS, FNP, CNM, FNU Course Faculty

    Patricia Caudle, DNS, FNP, CNM, is an associate professor at FNU. She has also been serving FNU as the co-chair of the Admissions Committee for many years. After working in the field for nearly 50 years, Pat is planning her retirement for next year – but only after she helps write an updated textbook for her class!

    The following statement was included in Patricia’s nomination:

    “Pat spends well above her assigned hours tutoring and mentoring students. I can honestly say every single interaction I have had with her has been positive and uplifting. She has demonstrated patience, kindness, and encouragement…and never failed to spend a bit of time extending a warm welcome to FNU. She’s a gem and one who will be truly missed when she retires next summer.”

    Katie Moses, FNU Admissions

    Katie Moses, an FNU admissions officer, is the face of customer service and knowledge for each of the many FNU applicants. She’s been in her current role for nearly eight years, often jumping in to serve in other ways, like running the Gift Shop when other staff were not available.

    This statement was included in Katie’s nomination:

    “Katie’s patience and understanding along with willingness to help is amazing! I recently needed help and she worked with me so patiently through the entire process, explaining it step by step. She also stepped up and helped out with our students when her co-worker was on medical leave. Katie completed the student and faculty housing, attended the bound preparation meetings and made sure everything was ready for the incoming students while continuing to do her own job duties.”

    Pat and Katie will receive a framed certificate and a $50 gift card, and will be featured in various Frontier communications.

    Thank you, Pat and Katie, for embodying the FNU spirit of community and caring.

    Do you know an FNU staff or faculty member that goes above and beyond? Nominate them now for the Circle of Caring Award!

  • Bring Mary C. Breckinridge to Your Community or Classroom

    Bring Mary C. Breckinridge to Your Community or Classroom

    Janet Scott as Mary Breckinridge - Photo credit: Kentucky Humanities
    Photo: Kentucky Humanities

    Frontier Nursing University’s story started back in 1925 with one woman: Mary Carson Breckinridge. Now, the Kentucky Chautauqua, a touring series of solo performances, has brought her to life for this generation to see her legacy – and you have the opportunity to see it for yourself.

    Mrs. Breckinridge was the first American trained nurse-midwife in the 1920s. Living in the the mountains of eastern Kentucky, she recognized a need for better healthcare systems and made it her mission to improve infant and maternal care. She established the Frontier Nursing Service in 1925, and after astonishing success in birth outcomes, founded the Frontier Graduate School of Midwifery (now known as Frontier Nursing University) in 1939.

    Though her work in infant and maternal healthcare were invaluable throughout the last 40 years of her life, Mrs. Breckinridge had a lasting legacy.

    The Kentucky Humanities Council’s Kentucky Chautauqua team, who has brought to life more than 70 people from Kentucky’s past, now features Mary C. Breckinridge in its lineup of dramatizations. Mrs. Breckinridge’s character is portrayed by Janet Scott, who is thrilled to be representing such an inspirational figure in history.

    “I often hear people say that they have been waiting for a Chautauqua of Mary Breckinridge and the more I worked, the more I saw why she is so widely beloved,” says Scott. “To honor the life of such a woman, to offer the message of boundless courage and compassion embodied in her life choices, is to present a story of saintlike heroineism.”

    The Chautauqua performers travel to schools and community organizations throughout the state, and are available for booking in 2017-2018 for audiences of 40 or more – perfect for your classroom, organization or community group.

    Frontier Nursing University is excited for Mrs. Breckinridge’s story to continue to be spread, as a message of hope and inspiration to all who hear it.

    “In a time when movie heroes have enormous moral influence and people want their own stories to be heard, Mary Breckinridge’s life offers a model that has profound positive impact,” says Scott.

    “The story of Mary Carson Breckinridge and the Frontier Nursing Service have had impact that has surpassed my highest hopes and revealed the necessity for her life giving words and message in our world today.”

    For more about the Mary Carson Breckinridge Chautauqua character visit:

    https://www.kyhumanities.org/chautauquacharacters.html

    To book a Mary Carson Breckinridge Chautauqua performance visit:

    https://www.kyhumanities.org/howtobookperformances.html

  • How To Become A Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner

    How To Become A Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner

    PMHNP at Frontier Nursing University

    At Frontier Nursing University, we’re proud to be innovators in the graduate nursing education space enabling nurses everywhere to realize their dream and achieve a rewarding career. But the field of nursing offers many unique specialties, and for students interested in using their careers to promote mental health and wellness, becoming a psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner offers an excellent option.

    We’re proud to offer a world-class Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner (PMHNP) program that makes it easy for certified Nurse-Midwives, Nurse Practitioners, and RNs with associate’s or bachelor’s degrees to get the education they need to succeed in this field on their own time.

    Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner Program Options

    Every student is different – and that’s why we’re proud to offer a range of options in our PMHNP program. No matter what field or level of education you’re coming from, we offer a flexible path to certification as a psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner.

    Post-Graduate Certification

    Our Post-Graduate Certification (PGC) program is an excellent choice for current Nurse Practitioners or Nurse-Midwives who wish to add a certification in psychiatric-mental health nursing. In this 32-credit, 18-month program you’ll get the hands-on learning and experience to thrive as a psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioner and receive a post-graduate certificate, making you eligible for the national certification exam as a Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner. From there, we offer the option to seamlessly continue your studies and earn a Doctor of Nursing Practice degree without needing to reapply.

    MSN Specialty Track

    For RNs with a bachelor’s or associate’s degree, the PMHNP specialty track in our Master of Science in Nursing program is now taking applications. Completing the program makes you eligible for the national PMHNP certification exam, and you still have the option to seamlessly continue your studies and earn a  Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) degree.

    Become a Psychiatric-Mental Health Nurse Practitioner Today

    All of our programs are available on a full or part-time schedule, and our education model makes your home community your classroom – making it easy to complete your studies while working. Don’t wait: answer the call and take the next step towards a rewarding career helping those around you. Apply for our PMHNP program today!

  • Board Member Spotlight: Phyllis Leppert, CNM, MD, PhD

    Board Member Spotlight: Phyllis Leppert, CNM, MD, PhD

    Board Member Spotlight: Phyllis Leppert, CNM, MD, PhD

    Dr. Phyllis Leppert, CNM, MD, PhD was inspired to join the Frontier Nursing University (FNU) team by FNU legend Kitty Ernst. Six years ago, Phyllis began her stint serving with Kitty on the Frontier Board of Directors.

    Kitty was Phyllis’s professor of nurse-midwifery at Columbia before the pair became colleagues while working on their Community-based Nurse-Midwifery Education Program (CNEP) in the 1990s. Finding that they shared a passion to lead improvement in reproductive health and advancement in reproductive science, Phyllis decided to join Kitty as a board member at FNU.

    As a Professor Emerita Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Duke University School of Medicine and author of over 100 research articles and 32 review articles, Phyllis came highly acclaimed. In 2017, she and two colleagues were awarded a patent for “Treatment method and product for uterine fibroids using purified collagenase” (Patent 9,744,138).

    Currently, Phyllis is working with FNU Professor and Course Coordinator Dr. Laura Manns-James to develop an epigenetics CM course for graduates and advanced practice nurses.

    Phyllis also serves FNU by supporting students and sharing about Frontier with colleagues, community members, and friends.

    Her favorite part about serving on the board is meeting students, especially through Diversity Impact weekend.

    Though retired now, Phyllis doesn’t stop there. She serves as President of the Campion Fund, a non-profit that supports basic research in reproduction, and is a member of the Advisory Board for Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment.

    Thank you, Dr. Leppert, for your valuable contribution to Frontier students and the FNU community!

    At the heart of Frontier Nursing University is a talented and diverse community of students, alumni, faculty, staff, Couriers and preceptors. Spotlight blogs feature members of our FNU community that are focused on the mission of educating nurse-midwives and nurse practitioners to deliver quality health care to underserved and rural populations.

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